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Welding Aluminum

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I have never welded aluminum.



I want to make some frames for banners here at work. They are 6x12 feet. The banner company wants $2190. 00 each. I was thinking I could do it out of steel, but boss says it will rust too easily and would like aluminum. The reason for this is to make some cash from it, and I do enjoy metalworking.



I would have to rent a Tig since all I have is a Mig. Is aluminum more or less costly than mild steel? I need 240 feet total. I can't really explain the final shape for these but measured it out to 120 feet each which includes extra for mistakes, and these are 20 foot sticks.



I have the other welding, grinding, cutting, metal working equipment. I have welded with a Tig, but just a very small aluminum box, years ago.



I will check steel and aluminum prices, Tig rental prices, etc. Is there a way to make it out of steel and prevent rust?



Thanks!



Nick
 
Aluminum is much more expensive than steel.



My best advice for you is to check with your local welding shop about getting a small spool gun for your mig welder and a bottle of argon. When set up properly they work pretty well and it'll be much faster than TIGing the whole thing. They won't mak teh pretty welds that a tig will but if you don't have much tig experience that isn't going to happen anyhow.



-Scott
 
Have you thought of stainless steel? You could weld it with your mig with ss wire and argon, reverse polarity. I like SS. :p



Cary :cool:
 
Don't get me wrong - I LOVE TIG... used to have a Miller Syncrowave 180SD digital. :{



However, if you're doing production work - Do like Scott said... get a spoolgun. Traditional MIG - where the spool lives in the machine - has a tendency to bind up in the line since the aluminum wire bends easily. If you have a spoolgun - the path the wire has to go through is very minimal and it shouldn't bind up at all. Since you're welding big signs - the bigger spoolgun shouldn't get in your way.



I'd also recommend that you need to find a big arsed bottle of CO2 and argon mixed 50/50. The CO2 will help a lot when welding aluminum...



Matt
 
HoleshotHolset said:
I'd also recommend that you need to find a big arsed bottle of CO2 and argon mixed 50/50. The CO2 will help a lot when welding aluminum...



Matt



I always thought that you welded aluminum with straight Argon. If you use any amount of CO2 won't it oxidize and give a cruddy weld?
 
You do use straight argon when welding aluminum. Make sure your parts are VERY clean, preferably use a stainless wire brush that has not been contaminated with anything. The cleaner it is the better it will weld.



Chris
 
My bad, dudes - I'm mistaken about the CO2/Ar mix and welding aluminum. I must have heard that somewhere and ended up repeating bad info. Not cool.



Matt
 
If you have a short enough lead(10-15') you can get away with just swapping the wire and gas (and the liner if its been on there a while/kinked), maybe go to the next size tip and be conscious of the straightness of your lead..... all depends on how many welds your gonna lay, position, etc. . We've done this many times when somehting HAD to go out the door RIGHT NOW and a repair/missed weld/ etc. had to be taken care of. It's definitely down and dirty, but it's easy on cash flow and saves a lot of running around. My $. 02
 
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